
A lively mosaic of early‑twentieth‑century India unfolds across these short tales, each one a bright vignette of bustling streets, fragrant markets, and the quiet rhythms of temple life. The author paints everyday scenes with affectionate precision—whether it’s the clatter of a city’s charpoys, the hiss of a hookah, or the soft rustle of a sari—offering listeners a sensory tour that feels both intimate and expansive. Colorful characters drift in and out: proud merchants, shy ayahs, mischievous children, and the dignified yet human‑sized figures of priests and fakirs, all navigating love, duty, and the occasional bout of comic mischief.
One memorable episode introduces a weary holy man at the ghat of Kali’s temple, poised on the brink of ending a long‑held vow. As he debates his next step with a languid priest, the scene swirls with gentle humor, quiet reverence, and the subtle tensions of tradition versus personal desire. Through such moments, the collection captures the heartbeats of a nation where the sacred and the ordinary coexist in charming, often unexpected ways.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (260K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-02-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1875
Known today for In Kali's Country: Tales from Sunny India, this early-20th-century writer is a notably elusive figure. Her surviving work offers short fiction set in colonial India, blending storytelling with a missionary-era perspective.
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